FIRST AND FOREMOST - jh45gun, we can start a new thread in pot belly stove if you want to avoid further trouble with the law.
But it is important that you understand the physics, and not just swallow the kool-aid you've been given.
Digger - excellent resource. I was going to try to send him there myself.
Go to the Jackson website and Calculate and learn, jh45gun. Do not blindly believe all that you have been told. I will give you the numbers you need to run. Its as simple as entering the numbers and hitting the calculate button.
Fletching length 4, probably
Select vanes or feathers
Fletching height - .75
Shaft diameter = .344 (the diameter equivalent of a 2216 or 2219 shaft)
Shaft length 16 (you said you are 16, but leave everything else and vary shaft length from 16 to 20 to 22 to 30)
Arrow speed use something reasonable, like 300fps for a crossbow. The 225 you posted earlier is more sandbagging then I see at my golf clubs member-guest.
Arrow weight use 400 or 420 gr.
Now keep everything the same except arrow length. Try a 30" arrow and your 16" bolt.
Realize that for every action of the bow or crossbow arrow (Carbon, smaller diameter, variable fletching length) the other could be countered to be the equivalent. We're trying to keep the arrow and bolt as similar as possible, for the time being, to understand the impact of the primary variables.
What did you find? Nothing. Arrow length is nearly irrelevant in the equation. Arrow weight and especially launch velocity drive the ballistics.
Which means EXACTLY what I told you earlier. Given a similar launch velocity and arrow weight, xbows do NOT drop more than compounds.
Now comes the hard swallow. Look in the cabelas catalog. Crossbow velocity averages 320 fps, with a 420 gr arrow. Bows average about 305 IBO, which means they are shooting a 350 gr arrow (which almost noone hunts with.) If you do the math to get the bow to a 400 gr arrow, the launch velocity drops to 270 fps.
Guess what that means. (But you can now run the numbers and determine this yourself.) Yup the average crossbow shoots flatter than the average bow. Science is victorious over gut instinct again. And your precious talking point has been vanquished.